Comparison operators which compared against every class member variable
now use C++20's default comparison operators.
Also remove operator!= that in C++20 is now auto-generated from operator==.
The current DS thread model has some pretty major issues. It makes it difficult to know if all data is from the same remote packet, and if the data changes while the robot loop is running. Additionally, the DS thread is used for a few other things (MotorSafety and State Tracking for EducationalRobot). This also makes sim difficult, as user code has to wait for the thread to know it has new data.
This change completely rethinks how threading works in the driver station model.
First, the DS HAL system receives a new data callback, either from Netcomm or DriverStationSim. Inside the context of this callback, all the low latency data is read and put into a cache. Doing some investigation on the robot side, this is perfectly safe to do, and also ensures a ds packet will not be parsed before we finish reading the current packet data.
After all data is read, the cache is swapped with a 2nd buffer. This buffer just stores the data, none of the HAL DS calls read from this buffer. An event is then fired, stating there is new data ready to go.
Robot code calls HAL_UpdateDSData(). This swaps the 2nd buffer with a 3rd buffer, which always contains the current data. This data will not be updated until HAL_UpdateDSData is called again. Which solves the state problem.
The high level driver station classes have. an updateData() call, which calls HAL_UpdateDSData, and then update button state variables, then data log and update the NT FMS data table (Java also caches across the JNI boundary here, but that could trivially be removed). An extra event provider is provided, allowing other threads to know when this call has been completed.
IterativeRobotBase calls DS.updateData() at the beginning of each loop, and only once per loop. This means all commands will always have the same state.
All of this means there is no longer a DS thread. Everything happens synchronously. This means Sim and testing is easier, as you can just call DriverStationSim.NotifyNewData(), and then DriverStation.UpdateData(), and you can guarantee that all the DriverStation.*** data is up to date.
As for Motor Safety and Educational Robot State Handling, those can all be handled by their own threads. The Educational Thread only needs to run under EducationalRobot, and MotorSafety will only be started if there is a motor safety object enabled.
-DUSE_SYSTEM_EIGEN now only removes include paths for Eigen instead of
drake as well.
The USE_VCPKG flags were renamed to USE_SYSTEM since they seem general
enough for that to work (the find_package() commands work the same way
on Arch).
The system libuv CMake build now works with Linux libuv as well.
This is enabled by the C++20 __VA_OPT__ feature.
Uses of "{}" format string were updated.
Some warning suppressions were required for older clang versions.
Also improve codegen of wpi::Logger::Log(), frc::ReportError(), and frc::MakeError();
these generate better and less redundant code if they use fmt::string_view for the
format string instead of templating on it.
* Use explicit this capture required by C++20
* Use C++20 span
* Replace wpi::numbers with std::numbers
* Fix C++20 clang-tidy warning false positive in fmt
* Remove ciso646 include since C++20 removed that header
* Fix global-buffer-overflow asan warnings in ntcore tests
* Add DIOSetProxy constructor to HAL
* Upgrade MSVC compiler to 2022
* Bump native-utils to 2023.2.7 (changes to std=c++20)
Co-authored-by: Peter Johnson <johnson.peter@gmail.com>
Checkstyle naming conventions were changed to allow most of what's in
wpimath. Naming rules were disabled completely in wpimath since almost
all suppressions are for math notation.
This is useful in some debugging scenarios. System.err is separately buffered, so when e.g. debugging test cases it doesn't interleave correctly with the C++ stdout/stderr logging. Even using flush() doesn't seem to help, I think because Gradle does its own buffering.
The warnings included recommendations of braces for if statement
readability, a recommendation for default initialization of an int
array, and include-what-you-use (indirectly through clang-tidy reporting
undefined symbols).
We migrated to magic statics for lazy construction like the following:
```cpp
class Singleton {
static Singleton& GetSingleton() {
static Singleton instance;
return instance;
}
};
```
fmt removed fmt::make_args_checked since it's no longer needed for
constexpr format string checks.
fmt deprecated implicit conversions from enums to integers in format
arguments, so I added explicit static casts.
This allows us to error out on deprecation warnings for thirdparty
libraries and standard library features.
Co-authored-by: Starlight220 <53231611+Starlight220@users.noreply.github.com>